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ANCA: Pallone and Weiner Speak Out Against Hoagland Nomination

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  • ANCA: Pallone and Weiner Speak Out Against Hoagland Nomination

    Armenian National Committee of America
    1711 N Street NW
    Washington, DC 20036
    Tel: (202) 775-1918
    Fax: (202) 775-5648
    Email: [email protected]
    Internet: www.anca.org


    PRESS RELEASE
    January 12, 2007
    Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
    (202) 775-1918


    REPRESENTATIVES PALLONE AND WEINER SPEAK OUT
    AGAINST THE HOAGLAND NOMINATION

    -- Oppose Sending an Armenian Genocide Denier
    as the Next U.S. Ambassador to Armenia

    WASHINGTON, DC - Armenian Caucus Co-Chairman Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
    and New York Congressman Anthony Weiner (D-NY) today sharply
    criticized the White House's decision to resubmit the nomination of
    Richard Hoagland as U.S. Ambassador to Armenia, in the face of
    bipartisan Congressional opposition and Armenian American outrage
    over his denial of the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian
    National Committee of America (ANCA).

    Congressman Pallone's remarks on the House floor and Congressman
    Weiner's letter to President Bush come a day after Senator Bob
    Menendez (D-NJ) announced that he has, once again, placed a "hold"
    blocking the Hoagland nomination's approval by the U.S. Senate.
    Last year, concerns regarding the Hoagland nomination and the
    firing of former Ambassador John Evans over his public recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide were raised by more than half of the
    members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee and over sixty
    U.S. Representatives.

    In a January 11th letter, Congressman Weiner wrote to the President
    that he was "deeply disappointed that you chose to re-nominate
    Richard Hoagland this week to serve as United States Ambassador to
    Armenia, despite the fact that 97 percent of Armenian Americans
    oppose the Hoagland nomination. His denial of the Armenian
    Genocide makes him unfit to represent American interests in
    Yerevan."

    The Empire State legislator, a leading advocate of Armenian
    American issues, added that, "your Administration has repeatedly
    failed to recognize the Genocide. Ambassador-designate Hoagland
    has taken a step back even from your regrettable policy by actively
    denying the Genocide. In a July 14, 2006 [response] to Senator
    Barbara Boxer, Mr. Hoagland indicated that the Armenian Genocide
    does not meet the State Department's definition because the Ottoman
    Turks did not express a 'specific intent to destroy, in whole or in
    substantial part, the group as such.'"

    Commenting on the Hoagland re-nomination coming on the heels of the
    controversial recall of the former Ambassador to Armenia, John
    Evans, Congressman Weiner noted that this action "raises serious
    questions about this Administration's support of the Armenian
    community. Ambassador Evans' only offense was correctly referring
    to the Genocide as 'the first genocide of the 20th Century.' This
    is an admirable admission of the painfully obvious, not a firing
    offense. Replacing Ambassador Evans with a Genocide denier would
    do serious harm, especially after many Members of the House and
    Senate opposed Mr. Hoagland's original nomination last August. It
    is due time that the Administration reverse its policy and
    recognize the Armenian Genocide."

    In a January 12th speech delivered on the floor of the House of
    Representatives, Congressman Pallone voiced his opposition to the
    Hoagland nomination and expressed his thanks to his New Jersey
    colleague, Senator Bob Menendez, for blocking Hoagland's approval
    by the Senate.

    The New Jersey Congressman noted his surprise that the President
    had resubmitted Hoagland as a candidate for this post, after the
    Senate blocked his initial nomination last year during the recently
    concluded 109th Congress. He noted that, "there is no way, in my
    opinion, that Mr. Hoagland is going to be confirmed because of his
    policy, and because of the fact that he continues to articulate a
    policy of denial... It would make no sense to send an Ambassador
    from this country to Armenia who cannot articulate the genocide.
    So I simply ask that this nomination be opposed again in the Senate
    and that the Bush Administration withdraw the nomination."

    In remarks addressed to his House colleagues and the C-SPAN
    audience, Congressman Pallone stressed that, "the Bush
    Administration continues to play word games by not calling evil by
    its proper name in this case. Instead they refer to the mass
    killings of 1.5 million Armenians as tragic events. That term
    should not be substituted for genocide. The two words are simply
    not synonymous. There are historical documents that show that the
    genocide cannot be refuted but somehow the Bush Administration
    continues to ignore the truth in fear of offending the Turkish
    government." He added that, "I don't think that our nation's
    response to genocide should be denigrated to a level acceptable to
    the Turkish government and it's about time that this Administration
    started dictating a policy for Americans, not for a foreign
    government like Turkey. This lack of honesty, in my opinion, by
    the Bush Administration is simply not acceptable. The American
    people and this Congress deserve a full and truthful account of the
    role of the Turkish government in denying the Armenian genocide."
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